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Making LED Flashlight water resistant???

B

BeachDude

Jan 1, 1970
0
I'm trying to make a LED flashlight for my bike or camping - and after
putting the whole thing togeher with the batterys and resistors...how
do I keep it from shorting out in damp weather (rain etc)???

I see these products that are like "liquid electrical tape"... they
resemble liquid rubber... are they any good?

What about dielectric grease? If I ever need to do any
modifications - how easily do these rubberized / sealant products come
off?

If I was to silicon/grease/rubberize my LEDs right up to the bottom of
their plastic lense (effectivly covering the pos/neg legs) would that
be suffecient to protect them against shorts???

Any tips, tricks, suggestions???
:p
 
J

John Larkin

Jan 1, 1970
0
I'm trying to make a LED flashlight for my bike or camping - and after
putting the whole thing togeher with the batterys and resistors...how
do I keep it from shorting out in damp weather (rain etc)???

I see these products that are like "liquid electrical tape"... they
resemble liquid rubber... are they any good?

What about dielectric grease? If I ever need to do any
modifications - how easily do these rubberized / sealant products come
off?

If I was to silicon/grease/rubberize my LEDs right up to the bottom of
their plastic lense (effectivly covering the pos/neg legs) would that
be suffecient to protect them against shorts???

Any tips, tricks, suggestions???
:p

Just use a little clear plastic plastic food container with a
wire-snap lid and o-ring seal; leave the LEDs inside. About $0.99 at
Target. Then the only problem is the switch.

How about a reed switch operated by an external magnet?

John
 
J

John Popelish

Jan 1, 1970
0
BeachDude said:
I'm trying to make a LED flashlight for my bike or camping - and after
putting the whole thing togeher with the batterys and resistors...how
do I keep it from shorting out in damp weather (rain etc)???

I see these products that are like "liquid electrical tape"... they
resemble liquid rubber... are they any good?

What about dielectric grease? If I ever need to do any
modifications - how easily do these rubberized / sealant products come
off?

If I was to silicon/grease/rubberize my LEDs right up to the bottom of
their plastic lense (effectivly covering the pos/neg legs) would that
be suffecient to protect them against shorts???

Any tips, tricks, suggestions???
:p

If you do not intend to dive with this light, but are just worried
about dew and rain, almost any water proofing will do. Shorting is
not much of a problem, since the voltage is so low. Corrosion is the
biggest problem, especially if any salt water is involved. I would
probably smear a bit of silicone caulk around the internal wires and
use a bit if silicone grease on the battery terminals. If it gets
dunked, open it up and pour the water out and you should be fine.
 
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